Breast Cancer: Coping With Your Changing Feelings
Having breast cancer can affect how you feel about yourself and your body.
Having breast cancer can affect how you feel about yourself and your body.
Palliative care, concurrent with standard oncological care, should be considered early in the course of illness for any patient with metastatic cancer or high symptom burden.
This fact sheet offers tips for younger patients for during and after cancer, chemotherapy treatment, diagnosis, symptoms.
This fact sheet addresses some common questions about hair loss during cancer treatment, causes, symptoms, and treatment.
Interventions such as telephone counseling can help women with early-stage breast cancer adjust to emotional distress stemming from the side effects of treatment.
Nurses should assess cancer patients frequently and intervene promptly throughout the treatment course.
In breast cancer survivors participating in a survivorship study, follow-up visits with an oncologist as compared to other types of clinicians are perceived to minimize stress around the visit, decrease worrying about cancer, and improve the self-perceived impact of follow-up visits on cancer survival.
CIPN is a debilitating adverse effect that can lead to reduced doses that hinder treatment effectiveness or early discontinuation of therapy.
CIPN is a debilitating adverse effect that can lead to reduced doses that hinder treatment effectiveness or early discontinuation of therapy.